The Borneo Post

IS recaptures last Syrian urban bastion in fierce fightback

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BEIRUT: The Islamic State group recaptured Albu Kamal in eastern Syria on Saturday after a fierce fightback to save the last urban bastion of its collapsing ‘caliphate’.

The jihadist rebound came as the United States and Russia issued a surprise joint presidenti­al statement saying there was ‘ no military solution’ to Syria’s grinding six-year war.

The two countries have long backed opposite sides in Syria, but the Kremlin on Saturday said US President Donald Trump and Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin made progress during a brief meeting on the sidelines of a summit in Vietnam.

Trump and Putin also ‘confirmed their determinat­ion to defeat ISIS’, an alternativ­e name for IS.

The jihadist group overran swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq in 2014, but its selfstyled ‘caliphate’ has since been whittled down to a pocket of land along the border between the two countries.

IS is putting up a fierce defence there, particular­ly for the vital Syrian border town of Albu Kamal, said the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group.

Syrian regime forces and allied militia from Lebanon, Iraq and Iran overran Albu Kamal on Thursday but lost the town again just two days later after a string of IS counter- attacks and ambushes.

“IS fully recaptured Albu Kamal, and regime forces and allied militia are now between one to two kilometres from the city limits,” Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Britain-based Observator­y, said on Saturday.

The Observator­y also reported 26 civilians killed, including nine children, since Friday night in artillery fire by regime forces and Russian air strikes that hit villages and camps for those displaced by the fighting in Albu Kamal.

Across the border, Iraqi forces seized on Saturday several villages from the jihadists in an offensive to capture the last IS-held section of their country.

The operation’s commander, General Abdelamir Yarallah, said his forces captured Rumana and 10 other villages as they worked their way towards the Euphrates Valley town of Rawa, the last Iraqi town still held by IS.

The jihadist group has in the space of a few weeks seen its ‘caliphate’ shrink to a small rump and lost major cities such as Mosul in Iraq, and Raqa and Deir Ezzor in Syria.

Albu Kamal is the last significan­t Syrian town it controls. Losing it would cap the group’s reversion to an undergroun­d guerrilla organisati­on with no urban base.

IS rose to prominence in the chaos of Syria’s conflict, which broke out in 2011 with protests against President Bashar alAssad.

It has since evolved into a complex war that has killed more than 330,000 people, forced millions more to flee, and left much of the country in ruins. Violence has broadly decreased since a series of ‘de- escalation zones’ have been put in place in recent months in battlefron­ts across the country.

On Saturday, Jordan announced it had agreed with the United States and Russia to formally establish such a zone in southern Syria to build on a ceasefire already in place there.

Multiple rounds of peace talks hosted by the United Nations in Geneva have failed to resolve Syria’s entrenched conflict.

Saturday’s joint statement from the US and Russian presidents urged Syria’s warring sides to take part in a new round of talks later this month in Switzerlan­d.

“What the joint statement indicates is a commitment to get this to a political reconcilia­tion and peace process. That serves their interest, it serves our interest,” a senior US State Department official said Saturday.

The official said it was likely that Syria’s post- conflict political system would be ‘a power-sharing arrangemen­t just like we ended up with in Iraq’.

The official expected that future parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections would see the Syrian people ‘decide they want different leadership’.

Assad would be allowed to go ‘ wherever he would like to go. Unless he’s under war crimes investigat­ions’, the official said.

IS fully recaptured Albu Kamal, and regime forces and allied militia are now between one to two kilometres from the city limits. Rami Abdel Rahman, Britain-based Observator­y head

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? A member of the Syrian pro-regime forces fires a machine gun as a comrade holds his feeding ammunition belt, during the advance towards rebel-held positions west of Aleppo, near Abu al-Zuhur military airport in the Idlib.
— AFP photo A member of the Syrian pro-regime forces fires a machine gun as a comrade holds his feeding ammunition belt, during the advance towards rebel-held positions west of Aleppo, near Abu al-Zuhur military airport in the Idlib.

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